New Orleans is more than 5 hours south, and classless, and very blue which is why it's equivalent to a third world country. Next time you go to New
Orleans, I just hope you don't get drugged and de-organed.

you didn't read my words or i wasn't clear enough but i said that words on clothing are protected, but i also said that how you wear clothes are not,
especially if it violates public decency. i don't want to be seeing peoples underwear or dangling bits and neither do most other sane people in
America.

originally posted by: LSU2018
New Orleans is more than 5 hours south, and classless, and very blue which is why it's equivalent to a third world country. Next time you go to New
Orleans, I just hope you don't get drugged and de-organed.

Haha... contradictions in the same sentence... you're all for less gov, but happy to legislate "class"?

Comedy gold!

It's not all or nothing. There have to be some laws. If you prefer no laws, go live in the jungle. If you prefer no freedom, go to prison. If you
prefer a balance then you'll understand we have to have the government involved in some things.

Doesn't change the fact that you want a lot of government if you want dress-code legislated.

You still haven't commented on the social level of acceptability set by our media (ie. music videos), in which baggy pants (and underwear, and butt
cheeks, and lingerie, and a whole lot more) are common.

How do you reconcile the double standard set by making clothing, or how clothing is worn, illegal that can be seen readily in all of our media, daily?
People are just following fashion.

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